AEW All In Texas 2025 Ended A Bad PPV With A Great Main Event
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AEW All In 2025 Credit: WWE AEW All In Texas came, almost overstayed its welcome, and went in the span of a six-hour pay-per-view showcase. This was an eight-hour show for those who watched beginning with Zero Hour. All In Texas was a slog of long matches that seemed designed to ensure the show remained on the air during WWE Saturday Night’s Main Event, the event WWE aired to counterprogram All In. AEW actually moved to an earlier timeslot because of SNME, only for WWE to add NXT’s Great American Bash head-to-head with All In. If AEW All In only kept the final three hours of the show, it would have been a lowkey masterpiece. Instead, a half-empty Globe Life Field sat through a series of slow-paced wrestling matches before getting to a masterful ending. One that just barely made it worthwhile. It wasn’t even 4:00 pm PST by the time AEW started its triple main event. Before then, the entire show’s momentum was carried by the Young Bucks vs. Swerve Strickland and Will Ospreay. This was a much-needed pallet cleanser after a heartbreaking moment where Adam Cole tearfully relinquished his TNT Championship. After suffering an undisclosed injury, Cole poignantly admitted retirement was on the table. The announcement soured the mood for what was a bittersweet moment when Dustin Rhodes became AEW’s second three-belt champion. Kazuchika Okada went on to join Rhodes and Mercedes Mone in that category later on that night. Mercedes Mone and Toni Storm effortlessly set a main-event tone during a heated matchup between two main eventers that could have gone either way. Storm vs. Mone was arguably the best match of the night. So much so, Kenny Omega and Kazuchika Okada—who went on to win the first AEW United Championship—struggled to follow it. Omega vs Okada…
Filed under: News - @ July 13, 2025 2:28 pm